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Thread: deer hair ?
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02-14-2015, 10:51 PM #11
You can experiment with all manner of critters. it's been done for hundreds of years. As Pixie pointed out, there is a reason badger is considered the premium shave brush and boar and horse were selected for use by the masses (historically speaking).
No matter how many men you kill you can't kill your successor-Emperor Nero
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02-15-2015, 03:05 AM #12
Funny. Do her a favor a buy her a better toothbrush and stop worrying about your marginal shaving brush. Get your priorities straight! : )
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02-15-2015, 12:58 PM #13
- Join Date
- Jan 2015
- Location
- mountainside North Alabama
- Posts
- 129
Thanked: 14Thanks for all the input- my wheels are turning. I'm also kicking myself- I process all my own deer and over the last 7 years here on the mountainside I've thrown away 25 tails. In AL you get 1 doe/day, 3 bucks/year.The tail hair is banded different colors, is very thick at the root and fades to very thin at the tip. A local antique shop has a pile of old brushes in a case- I plan to get a few and try my hand at brush restore like in some of the excellent tutorials here next fall when I get some more tail. In good acorn years the deer also have a huge tallow layer- hmmm maybe shaving soap-but that's another thread.
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02-15-2015, 08:45 PM #14
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02-17-2015, 03:29 PM #15
- Join Date
- Mar 2014
- Location
- Coimbra PT, Vancouver BC
- Posts
- 753
Thanked: 171O.K. you go ahead and hold the bear while I watch.
On second thought; maybe a profitable side-line for cash-strapped zoos?
Although I am not entirely sure how the public would react to the sight of a shaved Polar Bear whose hair has just been harvested.
Maybe better keep the bears out of sight till the hair grows back...
I once thought about getting a very young badger, raise the badger as a household pet, so he can get used to me, and then shave him once in a while in exchange for little morsels of his favourite food.
Maybe I could even teach him a few tricks, like fetching a ball or bringing my newspaper??
But as young badgers are exceedingly hard to find on ebay or Amazon, I gave up and shaved my long-haired dachshund instead, but the brush was a disappointment and the dog looked genuinely depressed afterwards.
B.Last edited by beluga; 02-17-2015 at 05:02 PM.
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02-17-2015, 04:47 PM #16
- Join Date
- Jan 2011
- Location
- Roseville,Kali
- Posts
- 10,432
Thanked: 2027Used to use polar bear hair for tying dry flys,stuff really floats because it is toattaly Hollow.
couple more stupid facts,the skin under a polar bears hair is jet black,the hair is actualy translucent,has almost no color.
Bears in warm climes (such as zoos) turn green green in the summer because algea grows inside the hair fibers.
Very important stuff we should knowCAUTION
Dangerous within 1 Mile
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02-17-2015, 05:16 PM #17
I swear I remember reading in a deer biology book (Leonard Lee Rue?) that the summer hair on whitetail deer is more durable than the winter hair.
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02-18-2015, 01:56 AM #18
summer deer hair is smaller in diameter and more flexible than winter deer hair which is very brittle. I use summer deer hair to tye comparadun flies and wings on other dry flies
"All of us are smarter than one of us"